recant的意思和读音

recant

: [rɪˈkænt] : [rɪ'kænt]

v.

recants  recanting  recanted  

v.avow

v.take back,renounce,repudiate,disavow,retract

recantv.

1.[t][i]~ (sth)to say, often publicly, that you no longer have the same belief or opinion that you had before

v.1.,,()2.;;;

v.1.to say that something you said was not true2.to state publicly that you no longer believe something, especially that you no longer have a religious belief or no longer support a political idea

1. autonomy recant conformity ...

2. penchant n. recant v. , horr horror n. ...

3. recall recant , recapitulate ...

4. reactant n recant vi recessive () ...

5. recall recant , recapitulate ...

6. reap > recant >, reciprocating > ...

7. ... arid recant v shambles n ) ...

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1.He said he had been unaware of Williamson's views and had ordered him to recant.

2.Her lawyer, Antoine Gillot, retorted that she had been placed under "scandalous" pressure to recant, without legal representation.

3.The Inquisition accused him of heresy, and at the age of 70 he was forced to recant his beliefs under threat of death by torture.70

4.Christians among the Hmong minority to recant their faith and to re-establish ancestral altars, according to area church leaders.

5.And Ahmed said the government tried to persuade al-Obeidi and her family to recant the story.

6.However, life would be pleasanter if Rhett would recant his heresies.

7.Though he was tortured to make him change his religion, the prisoner would not recant.

8.The Conclusive chapter mainly discusses the reflections to the social structure and the interrelationships caused by recant mobilization.

9.Martin Luther publicly burned the papal edict demanding that he recant or face excommunication.·

10.A few, like Xu Wenli, were marginalized because of their former prison records and their continued refusal to recant or compromise.